TY - JOUR
T1 - Self-harm and suicidal ideation among young people is more often recorded by child protection than health services in an Australian population cohort
AU - O'Hare, Kirstie
AU - Watkeys, Oliver J
AU - Dean, Kimberlie
AU - Tzoumakis, Stacy
AU - Whitten, Tyson
AU - Harris, Felicity
AU - Laurens, Kristin R
AU - Carr, Vaughan J
AU - Green, Melissa J
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2023.
PY - 2023/12
Y1 - 2023/12
N2 - Objective:We
investigated patterns of service contact for self-harm and suicidal
ideation recorded by a range of human service agencies – including
health, police and child protection – with specific focus on overlap and
sequences of contacts, age of first contact and demographic and
intergenerational characteristics associated with different service
responses to self-harm.Methods:Participants
were 91,597 adolescents for whom multi-agency linked data were
available in a longitudinal study of a population cohort in New South
Wales, Australia. Self-harm and suicide-related incidents from birth to
18 years of age were derived from emergency department, inpatient
hospital admission, mental health ambulatory, child protection and
police administrative records. Descriptive statistics and binomial
logistic regression were used to examine patterns of service contacts.Results:Child
protection services recorded the largest proportion of youth with
reported self-harm and suicidal ideation, in which the age of first
contact for self-harm was younger relative to other incidents of
self-harm recorded by other agencies. Nearly 40% of youth with a health
service contact for self-harm also had contact with child protection
and/or police services for self-harm. Girls were more likely to access
health services for self-harm than boys, but not child protection or
police services.Conclusion:Suicide
prevention is not solely the responsibility of health services; police
and child protection services also respond to a significant proportion
of self-harm and suicide-related incidents. High rates of overlap among
different services responding to self-harm suggest the need for
cross-agency strategies to prevent suicide in young people.
AB - Objective:We
investigated patterns of service contact for self-harm and suicidal
ideation recorded by a range of human service agencies – including
health, police and child protection – with specific focus on overlap and
sequences of contacts, age of first contact and demographic and
intergenerational characteristics associated with different service
responses to self-harm.Methods:Participants
were 91,597 adolescents for whom multi-agency linked data were
available in a longitudinal study of a population cohort in New South
Wales, Australia. Self-harm and suicide-related incidents from birth to
18 years of age were derived from emergency department, inpatient
hospital admission, mental health ambulatory, child protection and
police administrative records. Descriptive statistics and binomial
logistic regression were used to examine patterns of service contacts.Results:Child
protection services recorded the largest proportion of youth with
reported self-harm and suicidal ideation, in which the age of first
contact for self-harm was younger relative to other incidents of
self-harm recorded by other agencies. Nearly 40% of youth with a health
service contact for self-harm also had contact with child protection
and/or police services for self-harm. Girls were more likely to access
health services for self-harm than boys, but not child protection or
police services.Conclusion:Suicide
prevention is not solely the responsibility of health services; police
and child protection services also respond to a significant proportion
of self-harm and suicide-related incidents. High rates of overlap among
different services responding to self-harm suggest the need for
cross-agency strategies to prevent suicide in young people.
KW - child welfare
KW - emergency department
KW - mental health services
KW - self-harming behaviour
KW - Suicidal thoughts
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U2 - 10.1177/00048674231179652
DO - 10.1177/00048674231179652
M3 - Article
C2 - 37282347
SN - 1440-1614
VL - 57
SP - 1527
EP - 1537
JO - Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry
JF - Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry
IS - 12
ER -